Sponsor

Sponsor

E-80-what? Campaign flubs have long tradition in Minnesota

The DFL lieutenant governor candidate was caught on camera in
farm country on Wednesday apparently without an inkling of what
E-85 was. For the record, it's a fuel blend made largely from corn
and sold at gas stations scattered throughout the state.

Dutcher's flub was just the latest in a long line of campaign
blunders that range from turning the late Sen. Paul Wellstone's
memorial service into a plea for Democratic votes in 2002 to DFL
gubernatorial candidate Hubert "Skip" Humphrey III's insistence
in 1998 that third-party candidate Jesse Ventura be included in
debates.

But it's not just Democrats who have choked at crucial moments.
Republican Sen. Rudy Boschwitz helped sink his 1990 re-election bid
with a late-breaking letter to Jewish voters that criticized
Wellstone's commitment to Judaism. It helped tip a tight election
for Wellstone.

That's the thing about gaffes - they're self-inflicted.

"Gaffes are created by the person who does them," said Wy
Spano, a Democratic analyst who has been observing Minnesota
politics for 40 years. "They're much better than a negative ad.
It's like you do it to yourself."

There's a difference between all-out blunders and strategic
mistakes.

Spano counted Republican Mark Kennedy's attempts to portray
himself as politically independent in this year's Senate race as a
gaffe "just because it was so patently untrue." Kennedy is a
three-term congressman who has been loyal to President Bush. But
GOP analyst Tom Horner said it was one of those tough calls that
open candidates to second-guessing.

In 1984, Democratic presidential candidate Walter Mondale shot
himself in the foot by declaring that he would raise taxes, and
President Ronald Reagan crushed him.

"I put Mondale's into the blunder category because he didn't
need to do it," Horner said.

Perhaps the classic Minnesota mistake was made by Wendell
Anderson, a popular Democratic governor who turned the public
against him by engineering his appointment to the U.S. Senate in
1976. Payback came in 1978, when Boschwitz creamed Anderson and
Republicans spanked Democrats across the state. The DFL lost 32
state House seats and ended up in a tie with Republicans.

"In Minnesota's political culture, the worst thing you can
commit is to appear to be using politics for your own gain," said
Spano, who heads the Center for Advocacy and Political Leadership
at the University of Minnesota Duluth. "Missing that point was
Wendell Anderson's most astounding mistake."

So how much will Dutcher's E-85 blunder hurt her and running
mate Mike Hatch?

"It's always hard to tell, especially with lieutenant governor
candidates," said Horner. "Anything in the last couple of days
makes a difference in this close of a race."